The thing I really liked about Mad Max 2 is that it was (just about) all possible. The fortified refinery? That could, in theory, be built. So when Fury Road opens with scenes in the admittedly impressive Imortan Joe's Citadel I spent 15 minutes just wondering how on earth something like that could ever be constructed.

While Fury Road does lack the semi-realism of the first two films in the series (the less said about Thunderdome the better) what the exhausted viewer is left with is an hour and 50 minutes of jaw dropping stunts, chases and carnage. Which is no bad thing.

The hand-drawn animation is great and there are some memorable supporting characters but the Princess and the Frog comes across as a little confused, not least because the villain's motivation is really not very well explained.

While the murder mystery plot is no more complex than the average episode of Lewis, beautiful cinematography and superb, nuanced performances from Poitier and Steiger make In the Heat of the Night compelling viewing.

15 minutes into The Imitation Game, my wife pointed out something that Benadryl Cummerbund, Branson from Downton Abbey and the rest of their merry band could do in order to crack the Enigma code. 90 minutes later, they worked it out. This probably makes my wife more intelligent than Alan Turing.

It's got Bill Murray, Harold Ramis, John Candy and Judge Reinhold! On the other hand, it's got an awkwardly bolted-on third act, and few genuine laughs. The extended edition adds an extra 18 minutes of run time, none of which is needed.

Where the formula for Disney's early 90s resurgence was perfected. Beauty and the Beast has one of the studio's best soundtracks, some of its best supporting characters and of course the utterly brilliant Gaston.